CMA CGM and Endangered Species International Advance Marine Ecosystem Project in Sarangani Bay

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Global logistics provider CMA CGM Group, in coordination with non-profit organization Endangered Species International (ESI), has finalized the first operational phase of its extended marine conservation partnership in the Sarangani Bay Protected Seascape in Mindanao, southern Philippines. The multi-sector environmental initiative focuses on the restoration of critical coastal mangrove forests and the long-term stabilization of adjacent coral reef systems.

The structural development marks the first major milestone since the official renewal of the CMA CGM–ESI framework, which has extended joint ocean preservation funding and fieldwork through 2027.

The environmental program combines physical habitat restoration with community-driven economic development. During the deployment, CMA CGM Philippines field personnel, corporate customers, and local municipal volunteers planted 100 mangrove seedlings inside a dedicated 308-hectare mangrove conservation sector.

The site forms the baseline for an aggressive botanical target to cultivate and plant 5,000 mangrove seedlings across at least 10 distinct regional species by 2027. The reforestation pool explicitly includes the Camptostemon philippinense (Gabi-gabi), a mangrove species currently classified as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species.

Beyond structural coastal protection, the expansion of the mangrove conservation boardwalk is engineered to yield direct financial benefits for the surrounding community. The localized ecotourism and conservation framework is projected to directly increase regular livelihood income for approximately 20 local coastal families who manage and maintain the protected zone.

The broader CMA CGM–ESI conservation matrix covers three distinct, highly sensitive marine corridors across Southeast Asia: the Balabac Island (Philippines) to Pulau Banggi (Malaysia) maritime border, Negros Island in the central Philippines, and Sarangani Bay in the south.

Field data collected across the protected zones indicates measurable ecological recovery.

To reinforce the field operations, the partners unveiled the first of three permanent educational signboards along the public mangrove boardwalk. The learning points are designed to explain the role mangroves play in buffering coastal communities from typhoon storm surges, filtering agricultural runoff before it reaches fragile reef systems, and sequestering carbon.

Sivakumar T., General Manager of CMA CGM Philippines, noted that the initiative achieves a broader impact by directly engaging local communities, educating younger generations, and establishing alternative livelihood streams tied to conservation work. He added that the signboard installation and seedling deployment demonstrate how public awareness, civic engagement, and active ecosystem restoration must function together to sustain marine conservation over the long term.

The Philippine project aligns with CMA CGM’s global corporate social responsibility strategy. The Group continues to scale its environmental portfolio, partnering with specialized non-profits to execute 30 distinct global conservation programs aimed at mitigating localized ecological disruption across 130 countries.